Updated: Apple iWatch release date, news and rumors Apple iWatch: - TopicsExpress



          

Updated: Apple iWatch release date, news and rumors Apple iWatch: Health, apps and that curved screen What time is it? If you check your smartwatch, you may find that its a text message past a Twitter notification but if you check the zeitgeist, youll find that its wearable tech time. After more than a year of relegation to next big thing status, the smartwatch is finally breaking out into the mainstream with the likes of the Samsung Galaxy Gear and Sony Smartwatch 2 following where Kickstarter phenomenon Pebble led. But were yet to see a watch with true wow-factor and, for that, many are looking to Apple. Rumors of an Apple smartwatch have abounded since Pebble first hit the big time. The so-called iWatch has so far failed to materialize in 2013 but will we see Apple get in on the wrist-worn game in 2014? Cut to the chaseWhat is it? An iOS-friendly watch that plays nice with your iPhone (probably)When is it out? The rumors say sometime in 2014What will it cost? No one really knows Weve rounded up all the rumors and speculation to keep things ticking (geddit!) over. Which seem likely and which are complete Apple poppycock? Lets find out. Does the iWatch even exist? Thats the million dollar question, and one that only the Apple insiders really know the answer to for now. So the short answer is: We dont know. Now for the longer answer: Way, way back in 2008, Apple co-founder and renegade loud-mouth Steve Wozniak let slip to the Telegraph that Apples future could lie in an iWatch. And, in April 2013, an Apple board member mentioned the word watch. Taking time out of dissing Google Glass (I wear glasses because I have to), Apple CEO Tim Cook told attendees at All Things D that the wrist is interesting in May, thus kindling thousands of iWatch rumors across the web. The WSJ seems confident that the iWatch is real because its been talking to people briefed on the effort, while a couple of analysts have stuck their oars in too, saying Yup, an Apple Watch. That sounds feasible. Im going to say yes, that exists. Then, in the midst of a thousand iWatch rumors, Apple seemed to confirm that it was at least thinking about releasing a product of that name by trademarking iWatch in Japan, Mexico, Russia and a number of other countries. But a trademark does not a definite product launch make. The Nike connection While the world and its sister got hyped about smartwatches when the Pebble Kickstarter went stratospheric, Apples interest in watches stretches back beyond that. Design guru Jony Ive, in particular, is a fan. According to ex-Nike man and watch designer Scott Wilson, in the mid-2000s, Jony Ive took his team to visit watch factories and ordered boxes of a sports watch made by Nike. Before iWatch: the timely history of the smartwatch Thats well before Nikes Fuelband hit the mainstream, but the two companies are close. Like, really close: nevermind Apple CEO Tim Cook sitting on Nikes board of directors and wearing a Fuelband day in day out, Apple has reportedly hired Ben Shaffer (previously innovation leader at Nike) and Jay Blahnik, a health and fitness instructor who consulted on the Fuelband for Nike. So Apple really likes the Fuelband. And Nike really likes Apple, going as far as to tell TechRadar that it hopes the Fuelband has inspired the Cupertino crew. Jony Ive and his health- and sport-focused dream team The supposed iWatch project is supposedly being headed up by Jony Ive. Bloomberg reports that around 100 engineers are working under Ive to develop the device, but a number of secretive yet also high profile hires also hint at the Apple watchs potential capabilities. Aside from the ex-Nike men Apple has brought on board, Apple has hired a raft of sleep analysis experts, who hold several patents for integrating mobile devices with fitness equipment and biometric scienticians to boot. In early February 2014, Apple also nabbed Roy J. E. M Raymann, a sleep-monitoring expert, igniting rumors that the iWatch will be a thing you wear 24/7. Later that month, Apple also made Marcelo Malini Lamego, who specialises in health-related sensor tech, a job offer he couldnt refuse, and advertised for a fitness specialist as well. The San Francisco Chronicle went on to claim that Apples Tomlinson Holman, inventor of THX and 10.2 surround sound, is working on tech that uses sound tech to predict heart attacks. The iWatch will be mainly about health monitoring So it could be supposed that Apple is planning some kind of health and sport-focused device. And if that device played nice with your iOS devices and just so happened to be worn on your wrist, the same wrist that Tim Cook thinks is interesting, then it stands to reason that Apple could, perhaps, name it the iWatch. Insiders claim that such a device could even predict heart attacks, while a patent filed back in 2012 details how Apple plans to make some kind of wrist-worn device exceptionally accurate at monitoring the steps you take. The health-heavy Basis Science was reportedly making eyes at Apple, but Intel has since snagged the company for its own. Then again, it could just be big into this rumored Healthbook app which is supposedly en route to iOS 8, especially given that a rumour in mid February 2014 said Apple would be stripping back the sensors on the iWatch and relying more heavily on the companion smartphone. There is also word that Apple wants to monitor your health and fitness via your ears, rather than your wrist. The iWatch will be all about the curves The most recent word claims that Apple may be going for the whole bendy approach with a fully flexible plastic OLED screen, which was backed up by speculation that LG Display will provide G Flex-like bendy screens for the watch. Before thatd wed heard that Apple was playing with the idea of curved Corning glass. Apple is experimenting with wristwatch-like devices made of curved glass, says the NYTs Nick Bilton, quoting people familiar with the companys explorations. The glass can curve around the human body and may be Cornings just-announced Willow Glass, which can flop as easily as a piece of paper in the wind without breaking. In January 2014, Corning announced that its ready to manufacture curved glass products using 3D-forming technology. Gorilla Glass is the glass of choice on most of Apples mobile devices, so this sounds like good news for the iWatch, if it exists. Adding credence to this particular supposition is the fact that Apple has patented a 90s slap-band style form factor which would require such a flexible display. Apples patented plenty of tech that never sees the literal light of day - we cant help but hope this isnt one of those. In February 2014, the company also applied for a patent relating to flexible displays, in which a devices bezel could be done away with because the screen itself would bend around the sides of the casing. But hold your horses: in February 2014, the Korea Herald reported that an insider revealed that the iWatch is unlikely to have a curved screen because of the strain a curved 2-inch display would have on your wrist. A 2-inch display? Thats bigger than the previous rumors youll see on the next page... Apple iWatch: Display size, Bluetooth and battery The iWatch has Bluetooth but display size isnt locked down Thats what Chinese gadget site Tech.163 reckons, anyway, although that might be one of many prototypes. Bluetooth is essential, though: if the iWatch is going to communicate with your phone or iPod, low energy Bluetooth is the way to do it. Then, an Apple patent surfaced that showed a Wi-Fi-less device using Bluetooth to share another devices network connection - so youd connect the iWatch to an iPhone to get enough internet juice to get news, messages and push notifications on your wrist. Thats seemingly the idea behind formalising the standards for the location tracking Bluetooth-based iBeacon, too. A 1.5-inch screen suggests itll show selected information from your iOS device rather than mirror the whole display, which would be rubbish. However Apple is also said to still be toying with its idea of a 1.3-inch or 1.4-inch screen, though its the 1.5-incher that is said to exist as a full prototype right now. In November, the Korea Herald announced that Apple will make two versions of the smartwatch: iWatch for Him and iWatch for Her. Could the Apple watch actually come with a sapphire crystal display? Tim Cook confirmed that the company has invested in an Arizona plant that is experimenting with sapphire crystal glass so theres a possibility that a potential iWatch could make use of the tougher, more scratch-resistant material. Rumours suggest that the sapphire screen is more likely to make an appearance on a watch than an iPhone because its just too expensive. Apple might put a solar-charger in the iWatch So says the Korea Herald, whose sources in the industry tell it that the company will stick with lithium-ion batteries in the iWatch, with some supplied by Samsung and LGs battery-making arms. Since the energy efficiency of solar-charging technology is one-tenth of the lithium-ion battery, it doesnt make sense to run a gadget with solar power, the source told the Herald. The Heralds source refuted rumors from the New York Times which suggested that all of Apples upcoming mobile devices would come with solar, inductive and motion-charging batteries, with solar charging a particular focus. The iWatch may have Siri and Maps Nick Bilton again: Would it include Siri, the voice assistant? Would it have a version of Apples map software, offering real-time directions to people walking down the street? Could it receive text messages? Could it monitor a users health or daily activity? Some of Biltons questions have since been reported as fact by more excitable outlets, but the idea of having Siri makes sense, not least because you could pretend to be a sci-fi secret agent. In March 2014 word emerged that Apple is busily beefing Siri up, supposedly in preparation to allow an iWatch device to book reservations and send texts through third-party apps without requiring Apple to work directly with apps developers. If Siri is on board, it may be because the iWatch is running a form of actual iOS rather than a souped-up iPod nano software system - thus supposes Bloomberg again, with confirmation provided by The Verges inside sources. The iWatch features could include authentication, NFC, home automation and flying cars Bruce Tognazzini makes it clear his ideas are not based on insider information but they include predicting the weather, organizing your life, monitoring every step you take, replacing cash, making Passbook work really well and even fixing Apple Maps. We were with you right up till that last one, Bruce. He makes a good point about the iWatch release date too: Apple, when you look back, is never actually the first. They let a few others, sometimes many others, experiment first. (Tablets were out for more than a decade.) Then, they bring out the killer product. In March it emerged that the Apple Watch may come packing fingerprint scanning tech for NFC-based security reasons, although this news comes from an analyst who heard it from a supplier who had it from a leprechaun who came to him in a dream. This rumor became less spurious when Apple launched the Touch ID-toting iPhone 5S in September 2013, of course. Never one to shy away from a challenge, weve put our own concept design together based on rumors and speculation so far. Its classier than a G-Shock, we think youll agree. Apple iWatch release date and pricing The Apple Watch release date will be 2013... So said a bunch of rumors from the likes of Bloomberg, The Verge, an analyst and more. Its 2014 now, so using deductive powers unparalleled by anyone from Sherlock Holmes on down, were going to say that they are all wrong. The iWatch failed to materialize at Septembers iPhone launch event, but perhaps it will make its debut on October 22 alongside the iPad 5 and iPad mini 2. Update: nope! Display Search decided in November that the delay to a product that has never even been formally acknowledged by its supposed manufacturer is down to another mythical Apple product: The iWatch is supposedly holding up the launch of the iTV! The Apple Watch release date will be 2014... or 15... or never Quite aside from Tim Cook promising some really great stuff coming ... across all of 2014, when Apple hired ex-Burberry chief Angela Ahrendts to sort out its shops, a lot of people thought hey! shes from fashion, watches are kind of fashion-y, maybe this is something to do with the iWatch. Hey, maybe. After all, Ahrendts supposedly took particular interest in the watch retailing space during her time at Burberry. Ahrendts doesnt start at Apple until spring 2014. Hmm. Whats more, Tim Cooks end of 2013 staff memo said, We have a lot to look forward to in 2014, including some big plans that we think customers are going to love. Are we going to love the iWatch, Apple? ARE WE? Of course, theres always the possibility that Apple looked into making an iWatch and then decided naaaah. The iWatch is delayed In as far as any unannounced product can be delayed in the eyes of the consumer, rumor after rumor has claimed that Apples manufacturers are having trouble performing. A report in November 2013 posited that production of the iWatch has actually started but factories Quanta and Foxconn have been having trouble producing fully functioning products so mass production has apparently been pushed back to the second quarter of 2014 (April - June). In early January 2014, the famously unreliable Digitimes claimed that the factories producing the iWatch are failing to turn out more than 50% as working devices because of its teeny tiny innards. Hot on the heels of this bad news came more: The battery is also causing the Apple Watch problems with its display tech, to the point where Apple ditched one supplier and (we assume) moved on to another. The iWatch price is a total mystery Remember before the iPad launched and everyone thought itd be $1,000? Oh, how we laugh about that now. Clearly, though, until we have a better idea of what the Apple Watch is and whether Apple is actually going to ship it, nobody has the faintest idea what itll cost. Nobody but one anonymous analyst who had a stab at pricing and reckons somewhere between $149 and $229 (£100 to £150 / AU$167 - AU$250) seems likely. The iWatch will face stiff competition In fact, it already does. The wearable watch market could be the next big tech battleground as perennial Apple nemesis Samsung has already released its Galaxy Gear smartwatch. Other smartwatches have made their way into the limelight in recent months too: theres the original Kickstarted Pebble and the Sony Smartwatch 2 to contend with, not to mention a host of new gadgets from unlikely sources like Adidas, Qualcomm and Garmin. Other tech heavyweights are rumored to be getting in on the timekeeping game too; the Apple watch may have to fight off competition from Google, which filed a smart watch patent last year and was confirmed to be working on a timepiece by the good folk over at the Financial Times. Since then, rumors of a Google Gem watch have percolated through the web - could we see Google unveil its watch before 2014 is out? Also leaping aboard the wearable bandwagon is LG, which launched the fitness-focussed LG Lifeband Touch at CES 2014. And its not just smart watches that will give the iWatch a run for its money - other wearable tech like Google Glass swims in the same pool. Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey is backing Apples watch over the glasses in the short-term, but whos to say which will win out overall. Last but not least, even long-standing watch-maker Casio piped up to say that its ready to take on the likes of Apple and Samsung in the great battle for your wrist. Weve taken an in-depth look at the competition between the two types of sartorial gadget too, and conclude that the Apple Watch has the edge solely because itll hit the mainstream (and mainstream price points) first. Click below for our iWatch rumors video:
Posted on: Fri, 14 Mar 2014 16:52:01 +0000

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